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Kapamilya television host and actor Luis Manzano appealed to the public to report a fake Twitter account that has been posing as his mother, Rep. Vilma Santos-Recto (Lipa), for seven years.

Manzano in a series of tweets called out an account with the handle of “@vilmaSRecto” and warned that it is an impostor since his mother does not have a Twitter account at all.

This was confirmed by Santos-Recto herself in an interview last year. “I don’t have a Twitter account, kindly help us report the handle @vilmaSRecto in Twitter. Let us not tolerate fake news,” she said before.

Screenshot by Interaksyon

Manzano noted how much the account has been fooling everyone and reminded social media users to be vigilant.

Screenshot by Interaksyon

The fake account posing as the Lipa representative was created in March 2012, with the user describing itself as “The mother of Batangas Governor Vilma Santos Recto.” It also maliciously links itself to the official webpage of Batangas.

Screenshot by Interaksyon

It could be noted that the account misspelled the name of the congresswoman in its user profile description, apart from it having no punctuation marks.

As of this writing, the account has 5,799 followers, including the official Twitter account of the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

Screenshot by Interaksyon

Inside Ate Vi’s ‘account’

Some observant users have noted that the account posts malicious tweets which are uncharacteristic of Santos-Recto.

Screenshot by InteraksyonScreenshot by InteraksyonScreenshot by Interaksyon

The account also spread rumors of Jessy Mendiola and Luis Manzano being engaged before. The issue has since been talked about in the entertainment industry.

Santos-Recto opened up about the rumored engagement last August and said that it’s up to the couple to officially announce it.

The actor warned his followers of the account last April and asked them to report it. He also replied to the account’s post last year when it declared itself as Santos-Recto’s “one and only official Twitter account.”

Screenshot by Interaksyon

As of this writing, the account is still active on Twitter.

Twitter’s policies on fake accounts

The microblogging platform considers impersonation a violation of its policies.

An account “portraying another person in a confusing or deceptive manner may be permanently suspended under the Twitter impersonation policy.”

“You may not impersonate individuals, groups, or organizations in a manner that is intended to or does mislead, confuse, or deceive others.”

“While you may maintain parody, fan, commentary, or newsfeed accounts, you may not do so if the intent of the account is to engage in spamming or abusive behavior.”

The platform does not consider the account an impersonator if it shares the same name with a user “but has no commonalities” and if the “profile clearly states (that) it is not affiliated with or connected to any similarly-named individuals.” — Artwork by Uela Altar-Badayos